State: Still in Ohio
Just as an update on how things have progressed, for those who might be interested. This is not relevant to the question at hand, so if you want to skip the next two paragraphs, feel free.
At the last court date (we have only had one since the last time I posted), the supervision was removed, and I was given one additional hour each week. She was also ordered to share transportation with me, participate in a settlement conference, and allow one overnight which was supposed to take place on a certain date and time. There was also a conversation that took place with all of us (my lawyer, myself, my ex, and the judge) regarding visitation on the day after Thanksgiving, to which she agreed to allow me a full day with my daughter in lieu of me requesting time on Thanksgiving. The judge did NOT write this in the order (which I realize makes it unenforceable), which the lawyer did not notice until after we left the courtroom. The judge asked her several times why she was fighting visitation--she admitted that our daughter enjoys the visits, but that she doesn't want me to see her because I was not around for so long. The judge then told her that he did not want to hear anything about her manipulating the situation and that she had better not do anything that would make our daughter think that spending time with me was a bad idea.
Things have been confrontational since then. She cancelled our overnight visit as my daughter was invited to her first sleepover party--this caused a huge battle between us as she did not consult me and I did not agree (it would have been fine if she would have approached me and had a conversation with me. Instead she texted me the day before and basically was like 'this isn't happening this weekend. she chose her friends and she gets to make the decision'. It took a lot of strong convincing on my part, but we agreed that if she emailed my lawyer and put the next weekend in writing as the day of the sleepover, that I would switch the day. The best part of this is that instead of emailing the lawyer herself, she had her boyfriend (the same one that she taught my daughter to call daddy) email the lawyer and tell him that it was in our daughter's best interest not to have the sleepover that weekend and that it would be moved



. The sleepover went great, although my daughter spent the three weeks leading up to it telling me that her mom did not want her to spend the night and that her mom was very nervous about the situation. She cried when her mom left, just for a few minutes, and then I managed to get her mind off of it, and we had a really fun time together--honestly she did not even mention her mom once. When we were discussing changing the overnight, I was very calm and tried not to engage--she kept telling me that she was not legally obligated to let me see my daughter--ever. I told her that she did not have a right to change the court ordered date without an agreement from me, and that if I did not have it in writing to both myself and my lawyer that I would be guaranteed the next weekend then I would be coming over at the appointed time to pick up our daughter. She told the lawyer that I had verbally abused her (and literally, what I wrote here is what I wrote to her, with verb tenses changed) and refused to allow me the day after Thanksgiving. We had our court ordered mediation attempt, which went literally no where, as she refused extended visitation, weekends, overnights, or anything else (she also said that our daughter does not ever want to spend the night at my house again...which I know is a lie because we really did have such a great time). I have tallied it up, and she has cancelled 1/4 of the court ordered visits since July and has refused me any makeup time with the exception of one two hour mid-week visit. SO, yes, things with her are going terribly, but things with my daughter are going really well.
I did take OHIOGAL's suggestion and ask the bar for a referral for a lawyer on the lowest side of the hourly rate scale. I went to a consult and their retainer was also in the 2k ballpark. At this point I feel stuck with my lawyer, but I feel like I am better off than representing myself--but I do not trust him. I know that asking questions when you have representation is looked down upon, but I really need some sound advice here. I had my child support hearing two weeks ago, and as some predicted, I was imputed minimum wage at 40 hours per week. Interestingly enough, she quit her job, where she has worked for the last seven years just a few weeks before our hearing to stay at home with her kids (who are in school). I would like to appeal the support order based on the fact that I received a letter from my doctor stating that I can't work more than 25 hours a week. In all actuality, I don't work at all, I haven't been able to for quite some time due to my intractable epilepsy, though my doctor says that I COULD work if I could find a job where I can work very specific hours, just a few hours a day, with no heavy machinery and where I would be allowed unlimited absences when I have a seizure...without a doctor's note. If you know where I can find a job like THAT, please let me know. Additionally, I am having a temporal lobectomy on the 14th in the hopes that it will offer seizure relief, but we will see. I am not trying to get out of paying support, but I would like the hourly wage to be lowered to the 25 hours a week that my doctor advised. However, when I brought this up to my lawyer, he told me that by contesting the support, I would likely harm my chances of getting more time with my daughter.
This seems to go against everything that I have read on this site regarding the separation between support and visitation. I am planning on paying the ordered amount in fact, I already have made the first payment. I know that no one here is a mind reader, but is there any precendence of a judge denying visitation or restricting time for simply filing an appeal? Since my fiance is the only one who works, I do not want this to be an unfair burden on her especially when she struggles so much just to make ends meet. I have an open disability case, and I also have the potential for a better future with this surgery, at which point I would be fine with increasing the amount. Does anyone have any suggestions here? I do not want to ruin my case by appealing the ruling, but I also don't understand how I could be penalized for filing an appeal.
As always, I appreciate your help.